NEW HAVEN, Conn. – As one of the top
hitters in the 144-year history of Yale baseball, former Bulldog
Ryan Lavarnway has toppled his share of records. Playing in his
first full season of professional baseball in 2009, the Ivy
League’s all-time home run leader has added to his list of
personal accolades with one of the best offensive seasons in the
history of the Greenville (S.C.) Drive, the Class-A affiliate for
the Boston Red Sox.

The 2007 NCAA Batting and Slugging Champion, Lavarnway swatted a
franchise-record 36 doubles for the Drive in 2009 and tied the club
home run mark with 21 roundtrippers. Both numbers represent the
third-most overall in the South Atlantic League this season. The
former Yale catcher also set Greenville records for a right-handed
batter with 87 runs batted in, the second-most RBI in the league in
2009, and 218 total bases. Lavarnway batted .285 in the regular
season and ranks among the all-time leaders for the Drive with a
.540 slugging percentage. The owner of a Yale and Ivy League record
23-game hitting streak, Lavarnway hit safely in 14 consecutive
games for the Drive in May.

Thanks in large part to Lavarnway’s big bat, the Drive will
continue into the postseason with a best-of-three series against
the top-seeded Asheville Tourists, a team that Greenville swept
last weekend.

In addition to Lavarnway, a pair of Yale hurlers closed out strong
seasons on the mound for their respective minor league clubs. 2009
Ivy League Pitcher of the Year Brandon Josselyn ’09, who was
drafted by the Seattle Mariners in June, was called up from the
Appalachian Rookie League after just eight appearances with the
Pulaski (Va.) Mariners, and quickly became one of the most reliable
arms in the bullpen for the Class-A Clintonville (Iowa)
LumberKings. Though his split season did not allow him to qualify
as an official “league leader”, Josselyn was among the
best in the Midwest League with a miniscule 0.75 earned run average
in 24 innings of work. The righty hurler surrendered just two
earned runs in that time while amassing 18 strikeouts and three
saves. Batters managed a paltry .177 batting average against
Josselyn.

Brian Irving ’08, a member of the San Francisco Giants,
completed his first full season in 2009 in the Arizona Rookie
League. The ace of the 2008 Yale staff has blown away opposing
hitters, piling up 37 strikeouts in 22.2 innings of work. In his
final appearance of the season, Irving struck out six batters in
2.1 innings on the hill to improve his record in the AZL to 4-1. He
finished 2009 with a 1.19 ERA and a .169 opponents’ batting
average.

Lavarnway, Josselyn and Irving represent three of the 26 Yale
baseball players to be drafted or sign professional contracts
during the 17-year career of John Stuper as Mazzuto Family Head
Coach for Baseball. At least one Bulldog has been drafted in each
of the last five seasons.